Anonymous wrote:I've been following this thread and find it sad that there's such a lack of support in public schools. DS attends private and was diagnosed with a concussion in early fall. He is still not 100% but the school has been patient. They've supported him in every way imaginable. My younger
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in a car accident with my child in the car. We both had concussions from the accident.
My employer accepted a note from my neurologist and I took one month off of work to recover. My child on the other had no break because there was no relief from the work piling up and no instruction offered for missed classes. No IIS was offered, no support from the school team, and no help in reducing the workload to an appropriate level with the focus on the core curriculum. The school administrators viewed concussions as a "temporary" condition and therefore said it did not qualify my child for support and accommodations. They however, were quick to pull her from school sports but could care less about help needed academically.
IIS isn't "offered." You have to request it by completing a form and having a doctor sign off.
Anonymous wrote:I was in a car accident with my child in the car. We both had concussions from the accident.
My employer accepted a note from my neurologist and I took one month off of work to recover. My child on the other had no break because there was no relief from the work piling up and no instruction offered for missed classes. No IIS was offered, no support from the school team, and no help in reducing the workload to an appropriate level with the focus on the core curriculum. The school administrators viewed concussions as a "temporary" condition and therefore said it did not qualify my child for support and accommodations. They however, were quick to pull her from school sports but could care less about help needed academically.